[Mb-civic] state of health in america
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IHHS at aol.com
Wed Jul 20 22:26:14 PDT 2005
The State of Health in America
Gary Null Interviews Dr. Peter Rost of Pfizer:
June 10, 2005
On Friday June 10, 2005, Dr. Gary Null engaged Dr. Peter Rost in a candid
discussion on the nature of healthcare and the pharmaceutical industry in the
United States.
Gary Null: We're beginning with an exclusive Internet radio discussion with
a doctor who is also, currently, a vice president for marketing at Pfizer. He
is not speaking on behalf of Pfizer, but for himself. I have invited him to
share insights on the nature of the pharmaceutical industry. He is Dr. Peter
Rost. Nice to have you with us today.
Dr. Rost: Thank you so very much. I'm very happy to be with you.
Gary Null: We do this more like a classroom on the air, so please do not
feel that you have to give us any short answers. Give us as much of a context to
the answer as you wish.
Let us begin with a serious an important challenge, and that is: today many
Americans face the dilemma of not being able to buy food or other necessities
and buy medications they may need that can help save their lives. I find this
disturbing. I'm concerned that someone should have to make that choice. Your
position, please.
Dr. Rost: Well my position is that I think this is outrageous. We are one of
the wealthiest nations on the earth yet we have between 49 and 67 million
Americans with out insurance for drugs. They pay full price - cash, no rebates
- and what that means is that they pay twice as much as all the other people
around the world - in Europe in Canada - twice as much, and these are the
ones that can least afford it.
But it gets worse. Here in America today, the other people who have insurance
and various programs, they have pharmacy benefit managers negotiating on
their behalf [or] they have the Veterans Administration. Those drugs are sold
at the same price as we're selling them in Europe and in Canada. So really the
only ones that we charge these high prices to are the one who can't afford
it.
And what that means is many of them can't take the drugs they need. And we
know that drugs save lives. So, when you can't afford your drugs, you might die
or you may stay very sick. And it might also force you to go on buses to
Canada or Mexico or to go on the Internet to try to find a cheaper drug. But
going on the Internet while it's one solution and there are lots of very good
pharmacies on the Internet, there also bad ones. So there is a risk there, if
you end up with the wrong merchant. And this is what we re doing to the people
who built this country. It's usually the elderly in this situation. This is
what we are doing to the parents, the grandparents that built this country
for us. It's outrageous.
Gary Null: Let's continue on. A few years ago I had an opportunity to
interview the commissioner of the FDA. And I asked him, "why do we have drugs that
are so much more expensive than in other countries?" And without blinking an
eye he said, "Safety. We at the FDA value the safety of our products and
we're concerned about Americans only getting the best quality products." And I
asked, "Well doesn't Germany, Israel, Italy, France, Belgium, Austria, England
- they also have outstanding scientists and concerned bureaucracies and they
have something similar to our own FDA. And it was as if no one else in the
world has the quality of science nor the meticulous sense of detail for safety
and efficacy that does our FDA. So no country, literally none would be
considered acceptable to take a drug that's used in those countries that helps
those people and bring it into the United States.
And I said, "Well are you saying then, let me be very clear on this, are you
saying that no scientist, no government, nothing in the world compares with
us?" He said, "That's correct."
I thought, that's very arrogant, to assume that since we also have the
highest iatrogenic rate, we have the most drugs that have been reclassified,
relabeled, or banned because of adverse drug events after FDA approval, we've had
more Americans die or be injured because of medical mistakes, that we should
also be then be assuming that we are the gold standard for safety and efficacy
against the rest of the world where many people are not suffering the same
consequences in other places as we are. Now you're in a unique position. As
one of the higher ups at Pfizer, one of the America's leading, and the
world's leading pharmaceutical companies, you can give us a perspective that other
people cannot. So give us your idea of why these drugs are not being allowed
into the United States, and is it true that only in America do we make the
safest drugs and we could not trust that any other country could make drugs as
safe. Your thoughts please.
Dr. Rost: Couple of different issues. Number one, the drugs that we get in
the U.S. are the same drugs, manufactured by the same company, the same
factory as people get in Europe and in Canada. There is no difference there.
Second issue, America, unfortunately, while being a wonderful country, and
being at the forefront in many areas, some of the areas we're not. We actually
have, in my opinion, one of the unsafest drug supplies, but of course, the
FDA doesn't want to talk about that.
It's very simple. In Europe they require drugs to be prepackaged in
individual bottles and blisters. Nobody touches your drug after it leaves the factory
until the patient gets it. In the U.S. we sell drugs the way we sold sugar
or flour a hundred years ago - in loose weight. What happens here is we have
big, big containers with thousands of pills shipped from the drug manufacturer
to the wholesalers in the U.S. There are thousands of wholesalers - they are
not regulated by the FDA, but by the states. It takes a thousand dollars and
a driver's license to become a wholesaler. Anyone listening can become a
wholesaler. The wholesalers then takes the big drums with drugs and force them
into smaller bottles. Those bottles go to the pharmacist. But it doesn't stop
there. The pharmacist then has to pour those drugs into the very little
bottle the patient takes home. Lots of entry points for contamination, mistakes,
terrorists, whatever. Again, it's shameful, the FDA has been looking at this
for many years - they have not changed anything, but they are very concerned
about re-importation.
Gary Null: Thank you. I appreciate your answer and your candidness.
Another issue. And that is, there was a time when we could trust our
physician. You went to your physician it was almost a sacred ceremony between the
openness of what you had to say, the trust you gave the physician, and the
advice the physician gave you back to help you with your medical condition.
Today all of that has changed. Today, with HMOs people spend very little time
with most physicians, and more often than not you're likely to get
prescription for medication whether you like it or not. And in some cases you're
getting a prescription because your insisting to the physician you want what you
saw on television. You saw someone who had a condition that you have and they
were happy and jumping in the air after taking the medication and you put
pressure upon the physician. And in the time it takes to write a prescription,
you now have an opportunity to benefit also from that, so you think.
The nature of the relationship of the physician and patient has changed
because I believe, and I'd like for you to challenge me if I'm wrong, the
relationship between the pharmaceutical company and the physician has changed. Where
today it's an incestuous relationship between the pharmaceutical company
nurturing, guiding, stroking that physician from medical school right thorough
till today - so that he physician becomes one extension, the biggest supported
of the pharmaceutical industry.
Show me where I'm wrong.
Dr. Rost: Well unfortunately, as a physician myself I have to admit, and I'm
not doing that with an easy heart, that I'm very, very saddened by the state
of healthcare and the way physicians act today. Being a physician has become
more of being a businessperson than actually being somebody who cares for
peoples' lives.
There was a recent study where they used actors to make thousands of calls to
doctors pretending to have a depression and asking for a particular drug.
Almost all of those who showed the symptoms of depression got the drugs. But
the worrying part was that the other half of the actors who didn't pretended to
have any symptoms half of those got the drug as well. And here we're talking
about pretty strong stuff - antidepressants - and the patient got it because
they pushed for them.
So clearly, direct to consumer advertising works, and the physician very
often just wants to satisfy the patient. But many physicians today have stopped
practicing good medicine. And we also have so many physicians just standing
with their hands out waiting for the next trip from the drug company, the next
dinner, the next freebie. So the whole system has become so corrupted. We
shouldn't expect this to be normal. The fact that we have freedom and anybody
can bribe anybody else - that's not freedom, that is not good society and most
countries do not allow drugs reps to visit doctors as often they do here and
they do not allow drug reps to bring doctors pizzas and bagels and everything
else. I mean they are pretty much stewardesses in those offices bring them
gifts - bearing gifts. You create the relationship that way. So we can change
this - we don't have to have a system like this.
Gary Null: I've recently interviewed a drug rep who was one of the most
popular in the United States and for two years was in the top five most
successful drug reps in the United States out of over 100,000.
And she said that she had to understand the psychology of using her sex
appeal, using her sense of care and concern, how she would approach the doctor,
how she would set up a coffee table with donuts for his patients. And that in
time no one even questioned anymore they almost expected when they went in the
office - in his office - that there would be something there, pizzas or
whatever, given out free to his staff. And I said, "Did he at any point
recognize that this was just a different way, a more clever way, of getting him to
where he will prescribe your drug?" And she said, "No. That never came up. Sure
he prescribed the drug. And the drug I was selling, from my company, was the
drug of choice for the condition that he was a specialist in, heart disease
that he would give. It wasn't that my drug was better, that I had studies
proving it was better, it was just that I was better able to connect with him."
Your thoughts on this.
Dr. Rost: Well there is a great book out there by Jamie Reidy, called "Hard
Sell a former Pfizer sales rep", who describes exactly this and he had a very
funny sentence in the book, basically saying male doctors who were very busy
as soon as they got a whiff of female perfume - their innate reproductive
desire made them drop everything else and very willingly listen to these
beautiful women. I don't think that we should have our drugs prescribed based upon
male doctors' desire for sex.
Gary Null: But that's happening.
Dr. Rost: That's the situation we have today. It works equally well for male
sales reps who can charm the office staff.
Gary Null: The next area and I only have two more questions for you because
I know you're on a short schedule. But it's a very important one. I own a
food store. It's a natural food store. There are about twelve different
departments - from produce, organic produce, whole grains, breads, the deli, and
groceries. At the end of the day I know my markups and they range from about 25%
to as high in some areas as about 75%, but average about 40%. That's not a
lot and it's real hard to make a living. It's hard to stay in business with the
rent you're paying, the staff, the insurances, taxes, etc., but you manage
to etch out a living. It's not going to make you rich.
I'm also an author and I've published a lot of books, and I've been fortunate
enough to have some very popular selling books. But I know exactly to the
penny how much that book costs my publisher. I know how much the binding, the
ink, and everything and I know the markup. I know if I want to buy my book I
get maybe a 40% discount unless I buy a humungous amount then I get 50%. But I
know the actual cost of the book because I frequently buy a lot of those
books and give them away free to the poor and for years to non-commercial radio
stations I gave books.
And then recently I did some research on pharmaceuticals because I was
listening to a debate, this goes back about a year, and the debate was this: The
reason we have the most expensive drugs in the world in America is because so
much money goes into research and development - upwards of a billion dollars
and I'm thinking, "Is that possible?" I didn't know - I wasn't going to make a
decision until I had my facts. And I began to look carefully at this and
here's what I have and I'm willing to put this on the record and have it
challenged.
Let me take a few products. Let me take for our arguments sake take two. I'm
going to take Prozac, 20mg, 100 tablets. Retail price currently is $247.47.
The actual generic active ingredient for 100 tablets, for all hundred tablets
for Prozac is 11 cents. Do the math - that is a 224,783% markup. One more,
Xanax - 1 mg, 100 tablets, currently as of today $136.79. The actual cost for
those 100 tables of the generic active ingredient is two tenths of 1 penny.
That means the markup is 569,858%. Let me say that again -569,000% markup from
the cost of the generic active ingredient in that 1 mg dose of Xanax to
$136.79 for the actual retail price. I have never in my life seen markups like
this. I know of no other business that has markups like this and as a person who
knows something about pricing and economics I'm absolutely flabbergasted by
that. Your thoughts please.
Dr. Rost: Well this is what you get when you don't have a free market. Drug
companies claim that the U.S. is the only free market. That's really untrue.
The U.S. drug market is a monopoly - they can charge whatever they want. What
are you going to do? If you have car that costs too much you can walk away,
but when you're sick you can't walk away, you need the drug to survive, to
live, to go on. And when you don't have a good partner, a strong partner to
negotiate with as you can imagine you're going to pay the highest prices.
Where does this money go? Very simple - it goes into two areas. Number one -
profits. Number two - into marketing and selling even more drugs. As a mater
of fact in 2002, if you look at the fortune 500 list of the largest 500
companies, you take just the drug companies, the top 10 drug companies, together
the top 10 drug companies had a higher profit than all the other 490 largest
U.S. corporations. That's what you get.
Gary Null: Wow. That I was not aware of - I appreciate that insight. My
final question for you - why is it that the board of directors, the top
executives of these pharmaceutical companies are not put to the task of acting, not
just responsibly for their company and their products, which they have a
responsibility both fiduciary and a moral responsibility, but also the issue should
they not charge a reasonable price to make a reasonable profit so that the
public that may need that drug can actually afford it instead of having to not
be able to afford it. Why isn't there some moral equation that is not
discussed? And as a medical doctor, as an executive one of the largest
pharmaceutical companies in the country I'm sure at some point this issue has arisen
somewhere in the corporate headquarter system has it not?
Dr. Rost: Well you know the problem we have is that when you are that
wealthy, you're also equally powerful and there are many people and many
politicians with their hands out asking for assistance. One example is the Medicare
drug bill, which was going to give free drugs to the elderly in 2006 - it's
still going to cost $3000 out of your own pocket for the first $4000 of drugs.
But in addition to that, that drug bill included legislation that made it
illegal for the government to negotiate drug prices. You know it's so completely
counterintuitive. Why should the taxpayers pay full price when the government
could have negotiated? When you have a powerful industry that can buy its way
into a democratic government that's what you get.
Gary Null: I want to thank you for your candor, your openness, and your
honesty. It is a refreshing discussion instead of the normal propaganda and
defensiveness that I would hear from other individuals from within the industry.
Dr. Rost I thank you very much for being with us today.
Dr. Rost: You're very welcome. It was really a delight.
Gary Null: That was Dr. Peter Rost. He is also senior vice president at
Pfizer, medical doctor and answered some very important questions for me. So I
hope you enjoyed that.
Transcript, courtesy of Roman Bystrianyk, Health Sentinel
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